FrightFest Halloween 2022
Tripping the
Dark Fantastic
Director: LG White.
With: Simon Boswell, Alejandro Jodorowsky,
Dario Argento, LG White.
UK 2022. 93 mins.
Simon
Boswell in concert at Earth Theatre, London in 2021, with each track coming
with some backstory from Boswell and interviews with a few director cameos. I
have always loved ‘Santa Sangre’ and ‘Hardware’ scores (the
former being one of my all-time favourite films) and the performances here are
impressive with Boswell’s 12-piece band, Caduta Massi. Stepping in for Goblin –
who had to cancel due to COVID – Boswell sticks a coffin on stage and concentrates
on his horror scores. I still don’t care for ‘Demons’, and there’s some dodgy
lyrics, but it’s a wonderful mix of rock-out and classical approaches via
circus tunes, because Boswell covers a lot of ground and styles.
I thought a concert film/documentary was a curious/audacious
way to start the Frightfest Halloween day, but I was thoroughly entertained. LG
White – Boswell’s wife – is still editing and throws in lots of overlapping
visuals to try to capture the stage activity and live video backgrounds featuring
cameos (Iggy Pop! Argento!) and film clips. It’s a fine presentation.
Freeze
Director: Charlie Steeds.
With: Johnny Vivash, Ricardo Freitas,
David Lenik, Jake Watkins.
UK 2022. 90 mins
Starts out promising a low-budget ‘The Terror’ Lovecraftian
monster movie, which is all good. There’s admirable ambition, the Norwegian ice-scapes
are breath-taking, but there’s some dubious acting and, worse, the monsters are
somewhat ill-served. Not only is the fun design given away immediately (no build-up
here - but just look at it!), and perhaps we can step back from questioning their logic (assumedly
they are amphibious monsters that get their fishy food diving under the ice? Seals?
Bears?), but their squat-walking really doesn’t seem to be any sense (I mean,
they’re in a cavernous environment).
Gnomes
Director: Ruwan Suresh Heggelman.
With: Moïse Trustfull, Duncan Meijiring.
6mins.
I can report that Paul McEvoy, once of the FrightFest
founders, sat near me and laughed his socks off to this. The main source of
humour to this swift and hilarious short is the splatter excess. The designs of
the gnomes and their attack machines are delightful. It’s a show-piece kill
segment that doesn’t waste time in being outrageous.
Mad Heidi
Directors: Johannes Hartmann, Sandro
Klopfstein.
With: Casper Van Dien, David Schofield,
Alice Lucy, Leon Herbert
Switzerland 2022. 92 mins.
A parody frontloaded with its best gags, but then gets
districted by women’s prison satire and then weighed-down by increasingly leaning
on plot rather than jokes. Nevertheless, agreeable enough fun, powered mostly
by Casper Van Dien’s consistently funny villainous performance.
Outpost
Director: Joe Lo Truglio.
With: Beth Dover, Dallas Roberts, Dylan
Baker, Ato Essandoh.
USA 2022. 84 mins.
Takes a moment to settle down and make sense, but soon
settles in to a seemingly straightforward tale of a woman trying to escape a
troubled past of domestic abuse by becoming a fire marshal atop a forest
lookout. A film unafraid to takes its time, strong on empathy and performances –
Dylan Baker as the prickly neighbour and Ato Essandoh as Kate’s taciturn boss were
personal favourites.
It was obvious from the Q&A afterwards that Joe Lo
Truglio wanted to be as sympathetic to his approach to PTSD with a potentially
conventionally conventional thriller, and it is this that distinguishes ‘Outpost’
and motivates as well as allows for its narrative surprises.
On The Edge
Directors: Jen & Sylvia Soska.
With: Aramis Sartorio,
Jen Soska, Sylvia Soska, Mackenzie Gray.
Canada 2022. 114 mins.
Aramis Sartorio gives his all while the Soskas pose
and pout their performances. Any message about female empowerment is filtered
into sadism-revenge fantasy as a family man that books a dominatrix in a hotel
gets more than he bargained for. This sadism-revenge agenda also guided the Soska’s
far superior ‘American Mary’ but the body-horror fascination there is
replaced by two-bit Catholic morals here. Anal rape is the main source of
humour. But even more egregiously is the badly recorded diagetic dialogue and amateurish
sound mix that makes much incomprehensible. Which is problematic for a film that
is constantly talking at you. Eventually it devolves into strobe lighting and
bible verse and a simplistic morality play that makes a nonsense of any of its
transgressive and feminist intent.
Look to 'Promising Young Woman', 'The Beta Test' or even 'The Special' for more nuanced, troubling and fun interrogations of these themes.
The Offering
Director: Oliver Park.
With: Nick Blood, Allan Corduner, Paul
Kaye, Emm Wiseman.
USA 2022. 93 mins.
Introducing the film, director Oliver Park said it portrayed
beat-for-beat terrifying nightmares he’d had since he was a toddler. One can
only imagine that his nightmares came with bangs and blares and musical stings.
Certainly I anticipated a more surrealist, nightmare-logic to the film, but
what followed was a far more conventional horror. It relies too much on jump-scares,
which quickly become tiresome, despite being distinguished by its Jewish family
drama and folklore context, good performances and funeral home setting.
______
Favourites: ‘The Outpost’, ‘Gnomes’.
Surprised I liked: ‘Tripping the Dark Fantastic’.
Sad that: I ended up being a little indifferent to ‘Mad Heidi’ after the opening had been such parody bonkers and fun.
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